Text TDirections extPlease read the information provided and answer numbers 1-5 with short Directions: answers while numbers 6-10 are completed in full sentences. This assignment is to be turned in on the due date assigned in class Name Date Class Study Guide Chapter 7, Section 2 (continued) ORGANIZING YOUR THOUGHTSII Use the chart below to help you take notes. Industrialists and inventors brought the Industrial Revolution to the United States. Describe what the people listed in the chart developed or invented. Industrialists and Inventors Development or Invention Robert Fulton 1. Samuel Slater 2. Francis C. Lowell 3. Eli Whitney 4. Samuel F.B. Morse 5. READ TO LEARNII • A Revolution in Transportation (page 245) 112 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Erie Canal was completed in 1825. This was part of the transportation revolution that happened in the Northern states in the early 1800s. As a result, great social and economic changes occurred in the United States. In 1806 Congress funded the building of the National Road. This was a major east-west highway that started in Cumberland, Maryland, and ended in Wheeling, Virginia (now West Virginia). Conestoga wagons carried pioneers west on this road. Farmers traveled east on this road to bring their livestock and farm products to markets in the East. The National Road was the largest federally funded transportation project of its time. Most highway improvements were funded by state and local governments and by private businesses. Rivers were a faster, easier, and cheaper way to move goods than were roads. The only problem was that loaded boats and barges could travel only downstream or with the current. In 1807 the steamboat called the Clermont by Robert Fulton and Robert R. Livingston traveled upstream on the Hudson River. This transportation advance made river travel more reliable and upstream travel easier. Use of the steamboat caused an increase in river travel and canal building. This increased trade between regions created economic growth. Railroads were built in America in the early 1800s. Trains were faster than stagecoaches or wagons, and they could go more places than steamboats could. Railroads helped settle the West and expand trade among the nation’s regions. The American Vision Name Date Class Study Guide Chapter 7, Section 2 (continued) 6. Why was the steamboat an important advance in transportation? Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • A New System of Production (page 247) The Industrial Revolution began in Britain in the 1700s. The revolution consisted of several developments in business and industry. Manufacturing went from hand tools to large, complex machines. Workers went from skilled artisans to workers given specific jobs. The workers were often unskilled. Homebased workshops were replaced by factories. Manufactured goods were sold nationwide and overseas. Industry developed quickly in the United States in the early 1800s. An important factor was free enterprise. In this system, Americans could make money and make their own choices about how to use it. Free enterprise encouraged industrialization because companies were in competition. They experimented with new technologies to make goods cheaper and to transport them faster. Many states encouraged industrialization by passing general incorporation laws. These laws allowed companies to become corporations and to raise money by issuing stock. Industrialization began in the Northeast. The swift-flowing streams provided waterpower for the factories. The Northeast had entrepreneurs and merchants who had money to invest in industry. Importing British technology was difficult because it was illegal to pass on British technology to foreigners. In 1789 Samuel Slater built a textile machine in Rhode Island from his memory as a worker in a British textile mill. In 1814 Francis C. Lowell opened many textile mills in northeastern Massachusetts. He started mass production of cotton cloth in the United States. Inventions and technological advances helped industry grow in the United States. Eli Whitney made the idea of interchangeable parts popular in the gunmaking industry. Machines were able to produce large amounts of identical pieces that workers assembled into finished goods. In 1832 Samuel F.B. Morse perfected the telegraph. He developed the Morse code for sending messages. Newspapers used the telegraph to quickly collect and share news stories over wires. 7. What inventions and technological advances helped the Industrial Revolution grow in the United States? The American Vision 113 Name Date Class Study Guide Chapter 7, Section 2 (continued) • The Rise of Large Cities (page 249) Industrialization caused the rise of large cities. Thousands of people moved from farms and villages to towns and cities in search of factory jobs and better pay. By 1860 eight cities in the U.S. had populations of more than 100,000. The growth of cities led to opportunities for many kinds of jobs. 8. How did industrialization affect cities in the United States? • Workers Begin to Organize (page 249) By 1860 there were 1.3 million factory workers in the United States. During the late 1820s and early 1830s, many factory workers joined labor unions to improve working conditions. The unions, however, had little power or money. They could not support strikes, or work stoppages. Courts often ruled against early unions. Although early labor unions had little success, there were some gains. In 1840 President Martin Van Buren lowered the workday for federal employees to 10 hours. In 1842 the Supreme Court ruled that labor strikes were legal. 9. What were two gains made by early labor unions? Industry and cities grew in the Northeast during the early 1800s. Farming, however, was the country’s main economic activity and had the most workers until the late 1800s. Farming was more important in the South than in the North. The South had few cities and industries. The North began to focus on manufacturing. 10. What was the main economic activity in the United States during most of the 1800s? 114 The American Vision Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • The Family Farm (page 250)
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